Video Brittany Maynard Recorded Before She Killed Herself Pushes Assisted Suicide in California

State   |   Michael Cook   |   Mar 31, 2015   |   11:48AM   |   Sacramento, CA

The leading assisted suicide lobby group, Compassion & Choices, has scored another public relations coup with the release of a third Brittany Maynard video. Nineteen days before she committed suicide on November 1, Brittany recorded a video demanding that California legislators endorse assisted suicide.

“The decision about how I end my dying process should be up to me and my family under a doctor’s care. How dare the government make decisions or limit options for terminally ill people like me.”

After watching it this week, California’s Senate Health Committee approved an End-of-Life Option Act (SB 128) by a vote of 6 to 2. The bill will now be debated by the Senate.

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Brittany was only 29 when she discovered that she had terminal brain cancer. Unable to access assisted suicide in her home state of California, she and her husband moved to Oregon where it is legal. In the final weeks of her life, Maynard cooperated with Compassion & Choices in launching a campaign for assisted suicide in California and nationwide. She was interviewed on CNN and in some major newspapers and magazines. With a professional PR team organized by C&C, she made two videos which have been seen millions of times around the globe.

“Making aid in dying a crime creates undue hardships and suffering for many people who are terminally ill and suffering tremendously,” Maynard said in the posthumous video, which was recorded on October 13 last year. “It limits our options and deprives us of our ability to control how much pain and agony we endure before we pass.”

She also declared that she was repelled by the idea terminal sedation, a method of euthanasia in which a comatose patient dies of starvation and dehydration.

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The Senate Committee also heard testimony from opponents of SB 128.

Marilyn Golden, senior policy analyst for the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund, told the senators that there would be strong financial incentives for people to pressure disabled and depressed people into ending their lives. “It’s a deadly mix to combine our broken, profit-driven healthcare system and assisted suicide, which would instantly become the cheapest treatment,” she said.

LifeNews Note: Michael Cook is editor of MercatorNet where this story appeared.